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  2. I Survived a Cottonmouth Bite. Here’s What You Should Know.

    www.aol.com/survived-cottonmouth-bite-know...

    See where you’re stepping: Don’t place your hands and feet anywhere you can’t see. If it’s dark, use a flashlight or your camera light. If it’s dark, use a flashlight or your camera light.

  3. Penetrating head injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penetrating_head_injury

    Head injuries caused by penetrating trauma are serious medical emergencies and may cause permanent disability or death. [2] A penetrating head injury involves "a wound in which an object breaches the cranium but does not exit it." In contrast, a perforating head injury is a wound in which the object passes through the head and leaves an exit ...

  4. Rodent's Revenge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodent's_Revenge

    Mouse traps kill the mouse if it accidentally walks into one. [4] Flying balls of yarn kill the mouse on contact. [ 4 ] The number of movable blocks determine how difficult it is to trap the cats, while the unmovable blocks make it hard to move blocks around and hinder navigation.

  5. Brave Mouse Goes Head to Head with Cat and the Outcome ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/brave-mouse-goes-head-head-193000810...

    Just when you think the cat is going to pounce, the mouse completely flips the script and gets all up in the cat's face. Take that and that! The comments section was here for the tiny mouse ...

  6. Head pressing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head_pressing

    Head pressing is usually a sign of a neurological disorder, especially of the forebrain (e.g., prosencephalon disease), [1] or of toxicity due to liver damage, such as portosystemic shunt and hepatic encephalopathy. [2] It should be distinguished from bunting, which is a normal behavior found in healthy animals.

  7. Surgeon creates two-headed rat, says humans are next - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-05-02-surgeon-creates-two...

    One large rat received the head transplant, and the other provided continuous blood supply to the donor rat's brain tissue. The donor's head's blood vessels were later attached to the recipients.

  8. Backbiting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backbiting

    Backbiting may occur as a form of release after a confrontation. By insulting the opposing person, the backbiter diminishes them and, by doing so, restores their own self-esteem.

  9. Man shoots himself in head, rubs Neosporin on wound - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-05-16-man-shoots-himself...

    KTUU reports an Anchor Point man accidentally shot himself in the head while handling his gun. Instead of immediately going to the hospital, the man just put Neosporin on the wound for five days.